The presidential briefing on 9/11 was organized by Robert David Steele, a former CIA Clandestine Services Officer and founder of the Open Source Intelligence movement. Contributors include David Ray Griffin, widely considered the unofficial dean of 9/11 studies; Peter Dale Scott, the University of California-Berkeley professor emeritus who popularized the term deep state; Richard Gage AIA of Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth; and two dozen others including yours truly.

Robert David Steele knows people close to Trump and believes the president will “get the memo”:

“I’ve written a letter of transmittal to the president that focuses on what’s in the book and what he can do next. It’s about six pages long. I would say the chances of (President Trump) reading that memo are 80% or better. The chances of his getting a one-page summary are 95%. The chances of his actually getting the binder are probably down around 60%. The chances of his reading all the memos are in the 40% range. The bottom line is that Donald Trump knows this book has been published. He knows this book exists. He knows this book is calling him out on fulfilling his promise to get to the bottom of 9/11. And so I’ve presented him with something he cannot ignore as he goes toward his planned speech on the 11th of September this year.” (Truth Jihad Radio interview.)

Though the mainstream fake news media constantly attacks Trump’s “conspiracy theories,” it never mentions the President’s most explosive campaign promise: elect Trump and “you will find out who really knocked down the World Trade Center.” Donald Trump made that promise on February 15, 2006 to a cheering crowd in Bluffton, South Carolina. Why isn’t the media holding Trump’s feet to the fire on this astounding promise—if only to further demonize him? Perhaps because the people who control the media are terrified that Trump might actually act on it? Or perhaps because they know how obvious it is that the World Trade Center was blown to kingdom come with high explosives, so they don’t want to draw attention to the issue?